
The Folding@home distributed computing project has added twenty new Coronavirus (COVID-19) projects since earlier this week that uses donated CPU or GPU power to research new treatment methods.
Folding@home allows researchers to use donated CPU and GPU cycles to simulate protein folding to research new drug opportunities against diseases and a greater understanding of various diseases.
Last week, we reported that the Folding@home added three new projects (11741, 11742, and 11743) that were being used to research the COVID-19 virus and how to create potential drug therapies
Since we last looked on March 9th, 2020, researchers from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Washington University in St. Louis, and Temple University have added 20 new projects, for a total of 23, that are all being used to analyze the proteins of Coronavirus virus.
"To help tackle coronavirus, we want to understand how these viral proteins work and how we can design therapeutics to stop them," Folding@home's announcement stated.
The Current Folding@home project IDs that correspond with Coronavirus (COVID-19) research are 11741, 11742, 11743, 11744, 11745, 11746, 11747, 11748, 11749, 11750, 11751, 11752, 11759, 11760, 11761, 11762, 11763, 11764, 14328, 14329, 14530, 14531, and 14532.
Getting started with Folding@home
To get started with Folding@home, download the Folding@home client and install it.
Once installed, Folding@home will automatically be configured to lightly use your computer's CPU and GPU processing power to perform protein-folding when you log into Windows. A GPU will only be used if it's hardware and software is supported.
If you wish to increase the amount of CPU and GPU utilization, you can right-click on the Folding@home icon in your Windows system and select either from 'Light', 'Medium', or 'Full'.
It should be noted that the higher the intensity you select, the slower your computer will become, the more heat it will generate, and the more electricity it will use.

If you want to check what project you are currently working on or change some of the program's settings via a web GUI, you can select the 'Web Control' option as shown in the image above.
This will open a web page showing your current work-in-progress, your settings, and the project ID you are currently working on. To support Coronavirus projects, make sure to support research fighting 'Any Disease'.

After determining the project ID number, you can look up the project ID you are working on here. For example, in the image above you can see that the project ID is 14329, which is for Coronavirus/COVID-19 research.
The Folding@home project has said that due to the increasing interest in the project and CPU and GPU cycles being donated, it may take some time before you receive a job to work on.
"Each simulation you run is like buying a lottery ticket. The more tickets we buy, the better our chances of hitting the jackpot. Usually, your computer will never be idle, but we’ve had such an enthusiastic response to our COVID-19 work that you will see some intermittent downtime as we sprint to setup more simulations. Please be patient with us! There is a lot of valuable science to be done, and we’re getting it running as quickly as we can," Folding@home stated.
If you have an idle computer sitting around doing nothing, please contribute it to the project. Who knows, the data you are assigned and solve could be what helps to create a cure!

Comments
GT500 - 2 years ago
I tried it a week or so ago, and unfortunately my system became unstable after running it most of the day and then trying to launch a VM. Hopefully the BIOS update I installed since then improved stability, although the only thing in the changelog was improved performance.
Gatox - 2 years ago
Most COVID-19 work is GPU intensive so you have to fine tune the Fold@home agent accordingly if not it will process other projects.
Currently at 616,911 points on an GTX 1080, but even at full it will not consume more than 50% GPU.
MeekMark - 2 years ago
FAH current default setting of not choosing a specific disease to support will currently choose a COVID-20 project if any are available. Their servers are under heavy load right now, but be patient.
You usually do not need to worry about FAH slowing down your computer, as its scheduling priority is very low.
If your PC crashes, and you have a high-end graphics card, be sure you have the latest driver from Nvidia or AMD.
Some-Other-Guy - 2 years ago
How many thousand graphics cards is NVidia donating to the cause?
(crickets)
Engineer_AI - 2 years ago
Well said! Folding is a really great cause, if you have the tech/ coin to spare. I'm surprised by just how many non-government personnel are pledging their talents to help with the Coronavirus outbreak, one way or another. Some folks even managed to engineer AI tracking programs, which keep close tabs on the total number of infected and treated cases currently due to Covid-19. Folding.. does a number on your PC. It would be better if you'd donate to the cause, rather than helping them directly.
~Vibhor Tyagi (techie at Engineer.AI)
masalai - 2 years ago
Maybe someone can spare them 10 bucks to design a website that doesn't stick in an endless loop when you try to download. Find anything on covid-19? forget it
masalai - 2 years ago
Oh, sorry. MS Edge has a prob Chrome ok